FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] This invention relates to an amorphous iron-based alloy which excels in amorphous
texture forming ability and fatigue property.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0002] Ordinary metals in their solid state assume a crystalline texture. Under special
conditions (alloy composition and sudden cooling and solidification), even in their
solid state, they acquire an atomic structure which, similarly to a liquid, does not
contain any crystalline texture. Metals and alloys which possess such an atomic structure
are called amorphous. When such an amorphous alloy is made of component elements selected
suitably and used in proper proportions, it will excel conventional practical crystalline
metal materials in chemical,electromagnetic, physical, mechanical properties, and
the like. Accordingly, such a material has a high possibility of finding extensive
utility in applications such as electrical and electromagnetic parts, composites,
and textile materials. Amorphous alloys possessing high magnetic permeability are
disclosed in Japanese Patent Application (OPI) Nos. 73920/76 and 35618/78 (the term
"OPI" as used herein refers to a "published unexamined Japanese patent application"),
amorphous alloys excelling in strength, corrosionproofness, and thermal resistance
are disclosed in Japanese Patent Application (OPI) Nos. 101215/75 and 3312/76; and
typical amorphous alloys excelling in thermal stability are disclosed in Japanese
Patent Publication No. 19976/80 (U.S. Patent 3,856,513). Among the amorphous alloys
which have various outstanding characteristics as described above, iron-based alloys
are characterized by low prices of raw materials available, high degrees of tensile
strength at fracture as compared with conventional practical crystalline metal materials,
virtual absence of work hardening, and outstanding toughness. Therefore, they prove
useful as materials for a wide variety of industrial products such as reinforcing
agents, complexing agents, fibrous materials, etc. Among other amorphous iron-based
alloys, Fe-S-B type alloys possess high tensile strength at fracture reaching a maximum
even exceeding 400 kg/mm
2. Further, the Fe-Si-B type alloys have been known as amorphous iron-based alloys
possessing unusually high degrees of thermal resistance as compared with other iron-metalloid
type alloys. From the standpoint of the practical utility of metal materials, in the
case of the materials used in the parts on which external forces act statically, their
properties are evaluated with emphasis on the results of tensile test, particularly
those on the tensile strength at fracture. In the case of the materials for belts,
tires, ropes, and machine parts which produce rotating or reciprocating motions at
high rates of speed (dynamic materials), however, the results of test for tensile
strength, particularly those on the tensile strength at fracture, do not deserve any
attentive consideration. This is because forces repetitively act on these materials
for long periods of time and, in many cases, inevitably entail such phenomena as vibrations.
Accordingly, actual fractures occur in these materials without such heavy deformation
as would be observed in the test for tensile strength. These fractures induce fatigue
breaking under much lower stress than the tensile strength at fracture or even the
yield point. This fatigue property is the most important attribute for dynamic materials.
If a given dynamic material possesses outstanding tensile strength at fracture, it
still cannot be advantageously utilized unless it is also excellent in the fatigue
property. As regards mechanical properties of amorphous alloys, the results of the
tensile test and the compression test performed on a wide variety of alloys have been
reported in a number of publications. Concerning the study on the fatigue property
which is important from the practical point of view, the results obtained by Masumoto,
Ogura, et al., on Pd
80Si
20 amorphous alloy ribbons (Scripta Metallugica, Vol. 9, pp. 109-114, 1975) and those
obtained by Imura, Doi, et al., on Ni-based, Fe-based, and Co-based amorphous alloy
ribbons (Jpn. J. Appl. Phys.,19, 449, 1980 and Jpn. J. Ap
pl. Phys.,20, 1593, 1981) are about all the reports found in literature. From the results
of the study by Imura, Doi, et al., it is noted that the Fe
75Si
10B
15 amorphous alloy ribbons possessing high strength showed the same level of fatigue
property as the existing crystalline SUS 304 and registered a fatigue limit, Xe =
0.0018. This means that the amorphous alloy ribbons of Fe
75Si
10B
15 shows no
appre- ciable improvement in fatigue property for its high tensile strength at fracture
and exhibits rather low fatigue ratio as compared with counterpart materials now in
practical use.
[0003] Japanese Patent Application (OPI) No. 4017/76 discloses an amorphous iron alloy which
has as its main component an Fe-(P, C, B)-Cr type alloy intended primarily for improvement
of corrosionproofness (resistance to surface corrosion, resistance to pitting, resistance
to interstitial corrosion, and resistance to stress-corrosion cracking) and additionally
as a secondary component varying elements. This alloy is claimed to be useful for
preparation of reinforcing cords to be buried in rubber and plastic products such
as automotive tires and conveyor belts. This patent application claims a patent for
an amorphous iron alloy possessing high strength and stability to resist fatigue,
surface corrosion, pitting, interstitial corrosion, stress-corrosion cracking, and
hydrogenation embrittlement, which amorphous iron alloy contains as main components
thereof 1 to 40 atom% of Cr and 7 to 35 atom% of at least one element selected from
among P, C, and B, further contains as a secondary component thereof at least one
of the following four members:
(1) 0.01 to 40 atom% of either or both of Ni and Co,
(2) 0.01 to 20 atom% of at least one element selected from the group consisting of
Mo, Zr, Ti, Si, Ai, Pt, Mn, and Pd,
(3) 0.01 to 10 atom% of at least one element selected from the group consisting of
V, Nb, Ta, W, Ge, and Be, and
(4) 0.01 to 5 atom% of at least one element selected from the group consisting of
Au, Cu, Zn, Cd, Sn, As, Sb, Bi, and S.
in a combined amount falling in the range of 0.01 to 75 atom%, and has the balance
to make up 100 atom% substantially of Fe. The alloy which is specifically disclosed
in Japanese Patent Application (OPI) No. 4017/76 is in a composition of Fe
67Cr
3Si
15B
1P
13C
1, thus using Fe-Si-P-Cr as its main components. Although this alloy excels in corrosionproofness
(resistance to surface corrosion, resistance to pitting, resistance to interstitial
corrosion, and resistance to stress-corrosion cracking), it possesses very poor amorphous
texture forming ability and exhibits no appreciably improved fatigue property. Thus,
the alloy falls short of being useful as the dynamic materials defined above.
[0004] The inventors of this invention formerly filed a patent application covering a filament
of circular cross section made of an amorphous iron-based alloy excelling in corrosionproofness,
toughness, and electromagnetic property and useful as industrial materials for the
production of electric and electronic parts, composites, and textile articles and
to a method for the manufacture of the filament (U.S. Serial No. 254,714 and EPC Disclosure
39169). In some of the working examples cited in the specification thereof, Fe
71Cr
10Si
10B
9 alloy, Fe
70Cr
5Si
10B
15 alloy and Fe
50Co
20Cr
5Si
10B
15 alloy resulting from addition of Cr to the Fe-Si-B type alloy composition are indicated.
The addition of Cr in the prior art is aimed at improving thermal resistance and strength,
but it is not aimed at fatigue property. In the possible alloy compositions contemplated
by this patent application, the Fe
70Cr
5Si
10B
15 alloy and Fe
50Co
20Cr
5Si
10B
15 alloy which incorporate 5 atom% of Cr show practically no discernible improvement
in fatigue property and the Fe
71Cr
10Si
10B
9 alloy which incorporates 10 atom% of Cr possesses poor amorphous texture forming
ability.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0005] An object of this invention is to provide an amorphous iron-based alloy possessing
high tensile strength at fracture and high toughness and excelling in amorphous texture
forming ability and fatigue property.
[0006] The inventors of the present invention made a diligent study with a view to accomplishing
the object described above. The present inventors have consequently ascertained that
addition of a specific amount of Cr and a specific amount of P or C to the Fe-Si-B
type alloy composition brings about notable improvement in amorphous texture forming
ability and fatigue property. After further continuing the study, they have also ascertained
that addition to the alloy mentioned above of specific amounts of elements selected
from the group consisting of Co, Ni, Ta, Nb, Mo, W, V, Mn, Ti, At, Cu and Zr confers
upon the produced alloy notable improvement in electromagnetic property, thermal resistance,
corrosionproofness, or mechanical property in addition to amorphous texture forming
ability and fatigue property. These findings have led to completion of the present
invention.
[0007] Specifically, this invention relates to an amorphous iron-based alloy excelling in
amorphous texture forming ability and fatigue property, comprising not more than 25
atom% of Si, 2.5 to 25 atom% of B, 1.5 to 20 atom% of Cr, 0.2 to 10 atom% of either
or both of P and C, and the balance to make up 100 atom% substantially of Fe, providing
that the sum of Si and B falls in the range of 15 to 35 atom% and to an amorphous
iron-based alloy excelling in amorphous texture forming ability and fatigue property,
comprising not more than 25 atom% of Si and 2.5 to 25 atom% of B (providing that the
sum of Si and B falls in the range of 15 to 35 atom%), 1.5 to 20 atom% of Cr, 0.2
to 10 atom% of either or both of P and C, not more than 30 atom% of at least one element
selected from the group consisting of Co, Ni, Ta, Nb, Mo, W, V, Mn, Ti, Ai, Cu and
Zr, and the balance to make up 100 atom% substantially of Fe (providing that the maximum
Co content is 30 atom% and that the maximum Ni content is 20 atom%, and the maximum
Ta and Nb contents are 10 atom% each, those of Mo, W, V and Mn contents are 5 atom%
each, and those of Ti, At, Cu and Zn contents are 2.5 atom% each).
[0008] Since the alloys of this invention excel in tensile strength at fracture, thermal
resistance, corrosionproofness, and electromagnetic property as well as in amorphous
texture forming ability and fatigue property, they prove highly useful for the production
of reinforcements in rubber and plastic products such as conveyor belts and automotive
tires, composites as with concrete and glass, various industrial reinforcing materials,
knit and woven products represented by fine-mesh filters, and electromagnetic materials
represented by electromagnetic filters and sensors.
[0009] The other objects and characteristic features of this invention will become apparent
to those skilled in the art as the disclosure is made in the following description
of -a preferred embodiment of the invention, as illustrated in the accompanying sheet
of drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0010] Figure 1 is a schematic diagram of a model- flexing type fatigue tester used for
measurement of fatigue property. Figure 2 is a graph showing an S-N curve determined
with the aid of the device of Figure 1. In this graph, the vertical axis is the scale
for the surface distortion of a test piece (X) and the horizontal axis is the scale
for the number of repeated flexes (N) .
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0011] The amorphous alloy of the present invention has an Si content of not more than 25
atom%, a B content in the range of 2.5 to 25 atom%, and the sum of the Si and B contents
in the range of 15 to 35 atom%. These are the elements and their amounts of incorporation
which are indispensable to the production of an amorphous alloy by sudden cooling
and solidification of the Fe-Si-B type alloy composition from its molten state. If
the Si or B content is more than 25 atom%, if the B content is less than 2.5 atom%,
or if the Si content is less than 25 atom% and the B content falls in the range of
2.5 to 25 atom% and yet the sum of the Si and B contents is less than l5 atom% or
more than 35 atom%, the fused mixture produced resultantly fails to form an amorphous
alloy even when it is suddenly cooled and solidified and gives rise to a highly brittle
useless crystalline alloy instead. The tensile strength at fracture exhibited by the
Fe-Si-B type alloy increases proportionally as the sum of the Si and B contents, particularly
the B content, increases. The amorphous texture forming ability of this alloy reaches
its peak when the Si content is 10 atom% and the B content is in the neighborhood
of 15 atom%. This ability decreases as the sum of the Si and B contents is increased
or decreased from the levels mentioned. All considered, therefore, the alloy composition
is desired to be such that the Si content is not more than 17.5 atom%, the B content
falls in the range of 5 to 22.5 atom%, and the sum of the Si and B contents falls
in the range of 17.5 to 32.5 atom%. More preferably, the Si content falls in the range
of 3 to 17-.5 atom%, particularly preferably 3 to 16 atom%, and the B content falls
in the range of 7.5 to 20 atom%, preferably 9 to 20 atom%. The Cr content in the alloy
composition is required to fall in the range of 1.5 to 20 atom%. These elements and
amounts enhance the fatigue property of the aforementioned Fe-Si-B type amorphous
alloy without appreciably sacrificing the amorphous texture forming ability thereof.
If the Cr content is less than 1.5 atom%, then the improvement of the fatigue property
expected from the addition of Cr is hardly attainable. If the Cr content is increased
to more than 20 atom%, the amorphous texture forming ability is extremely low and
the improvement of the fatigue property is not attained as expected. The aforementioned
Fe-Si-B-Cr type alloy further requires incorporation therein of 0.2 to 10 atom% of
either or both of P and C. These elements and amounts heighten the amorphous texture
forming ability liable to be impaired by the addition of Cr and also improve the fatigue
property further. These elements fail to improve the amorphous texture forming ability
and the fatigue property if their amounts of addition exceed the upper limit, or fail
to reach the lower limit, of the range specified above. Particularly in the case of
the aforementioned Fe-Si-B-Cr type alloy, the P or C content is desired to fall in
the range of 0.5 to 5 atom% or the sum of the P and C contents to fall in the range
of 1 to 8 atom% where the Cr content is in the range of 3 to 10 -atom%. This means
that when the Cr content is small, the amorphous texture forming ability and the fatigue
property can be simultaneously improved by combined addition of P and C.
[0012] The fact that a given alloy is excellent in amorphous texture forming ability implies
that it readily and economically produces thick ribbons or thick wires of amorphous
texture by the roll method, the centrifugal quenching method, the spinning-in-rotary-liquid
method, etc. Where the alloy is not required to produce thick ribbons or thick wires,
it is still capable of notably increasing the cooling speed or being used to produce
another shaped article of amorphous texture (free from inclusion of crystals or microcrystals)
to be easily and uniformly produced without requiring any rigid control of the cooling
speed. If the alloy is deficient in the amorphous texture forming ability, then it
is barely enabled by a specific method excelling in cooling speed (such as, for example,
the roll method) to produce articles of amorphous texture only in a specific shape
(ribbons of a very samll thickness!.
[0013] In another aspect of the present invention, at least one element selected from the
group consisting of Co, Ni, Ta, Nb, Mo, W, V, Mn, Ti, At, Cu and Zr is added in an
amount of not more than 30 atom% (providing that the maximum of Co content is 30 atom%
and that the maximum Ni content is 20 atom%, and the maximum Ta and Nb contents are
10 atom% each, those of Mo, W, V, and Mn contents are 5 atom% each, and those of Ti,
Aℓ, Cu, and Zr contents are 2.5 atom% each) is added to the aforementioned Fe-Si-B-Cr-P
type alloy, Fe-Si-B-Cr-C type alloy or Fe-Si-B-Cr-P-C type alloy to give further improvement
in electromagnetic property, thermal resistance, corrosionproofness, and mechanical
property of the alloy without noticeably impairing the amorphous texture forming ability.
If the amount of the element added is too large, the aforementioned properties cannot
be notably improved as expected and the amorphous texture forming ability is extremely
impaired. Consequently, the composition fails to produce a tough, amorphous alloy.
With respect to the elements enumerated as desirable components for the selective
addition mentioned above, Co and Ni are the elements which go to improving chiefly
electromagnetic property and corrosionproofness, Ta, Nb, Mo, W, V, Mn and Zr are the
elements which go to improving chiefly thermal resistance and mechanical property,
and Ta, Nb, Mo, W, Ti, A1 and Cu are the elements which go to improving corrosionproofness.
Moreover, the alloy can be improved also in amorphous texture forming ability by adding
thereto Ta in an amount of not more than 8 atom% and Nb, Mo and W each in an amount
of not more than 4 atom%. Optionally, other elements such as normal impurities contained
in the industrial raw materials may be added to the aforementioned alloy in very small
amounts enough to avoid exerting adverse effects upon thermal stability, corrosionproofness,
electromagnetic property, mechanical property, amorphous texture forming ability,
and fatigue property of the alloy.
[0014] Production of the alloy of the present invention is accomplished by preparing the
aforementioned alloy composition, heating the composition into a molten state, and
suddenly cooling the hot fused composition. Various methods are available for the
purpose of this cooling of the fused composition. To produce flat ribbons of amorphous
alloy from the fused composition, adoption of the centrifugal quenching method, the
one-roll method, or the two-roll method proves advantageous. To obtain shaped products
of amorphous alloy having a circular cross section from the fused composition, the
method which comprises placing a liquid coolant in a rotary drum thereby causing the
liquid coolant to form a whirling layer on the inner wall of the drum by the centrifugal
force generated by the rotation of the drum and jetting the fused composition into
the whirling layer of liquid coolant thereby cooling and solidifying the fused composition
(the spinning-in-rotary-liquid method: U.S. Serial No. 254,714, EPC Disclosure 39169)
may be advantageously adopted. Since this method permits the whirling speed of the
liquid coolant to be controlled and prevents the coolant in motion from turbulence
and enables the flow of fused composition to be passed through the whirling liquid
coolant to be cooled and solidified therein by the combination of the jetting pressure
of the flow of fused composition and the centrifugal force exerted by the drum, it
has a very high cooling speed and is capable of producing wires of amorphous alloy
in fairly large diameters. To produce wires of amorphous alloy uniformly in high quality
by this method, the spinning nozzle used for jetting the fused composition is desired
to be located as closely to the surface of the whirling flow of liquid coolant (preferably
within a distance of 5 mm) as possible and the peripheral speed of the rotary drum
to be equalized with, or even to exceed, the speed at which the fused composition
is jetted through the spinning nozzle. Preferably, the peripheral speed of the rotary
drum should be 5 to" 30% higher than the speed at which the fused composition is jetted
through the spinning nozzle. Further, the jet of fused composition emitted from the
spinning nozzle is desired to form an angle of not less than 20° with respect to the
whirling layer of liquid coolant formed on the inner wall of the drum.
[0015] Comparison between ribbons of amorphous texture produced by the aforementioned liquid
quenching method or one-roll method from the aforementioned alloy composition of this
invention and wires of amorphous texture having a circular cross section and produced
by the spinning-in-rotary-liquid method from the same alloy composition reveals that
while they are nearly equal in mechanical and thermal properties, the wires having
a circular cross section incredibly excel by far the ribbons in terms of fatigue property.
Since the amorphous alloy of excellent fatigue property aimed at by the present invention
is made of the aforementioned alloy composition which excels in amorphous texture
forming ability, it permits a wire of amorphous texture having a circular cross section
to be readily produced by the spinning-in-rotary-liquid method. In the manufacture
of such wires, the alloy of this invention manifests its effect more conspicuously.
For example, ribbons of amorphous texture 50 µm in thickness produced of the alloy
composition, Fe
67Cr
8Si
8B
12P
2.5C
2.5, of this invention by the one-roll method show 358 kg/mm
2 of tensile strength at fracture and 0.0060 of fatigue limit (Xe), whereas wires of
amorphous texture having a circular cross section 100 µm in diameter produced of the
same alloy composition by the spinning-in-rotary-liquid method show 365 kg/mm
2 of tensile strength at fracture and 0.012 of fatigue limit (λe). Thus, the wires
evidently excel the ribbons in fatigue property when they are made of one and the
same alloy composition.
[0016] The amorphous alloy of-this invention can be continuously cold worked. By drawing
the alloy composition of the present invention through a commercially available diamond
die, for example, a uniform wire of amorphous texture possessing high tensile strength
at fracture and high elongation can be produced economically from the alloy.
[0017] Further, since the alloy of the present invention is excellent in tensile strength
at fracture, thermal resistance, corrosionproofness, and electromagnetic property
as well as in amorphous texture forming ability and fatigue property as described
above, it finds extensive utility in applications to rubber and plastic reinforcing
materials such as conveyor belts and automotive tires, composites such as with concrete
and glass, various industrial reinforcing materials, knit and woven articles represented
by fine-mesh filters, and electromagnetic articles represented by electromagnetic
filters and sensors.
[0018] Now, the present invention will be described more specifically below with reference
to working examples. However, the scope of the invention is not limited to these examples.
[0019] In the examples, the fatigue property was rated as follows.
(1) Fatigue limit (Xe): On a model flexing fatigue tester (designed to produce repeated
flexes in one direction) illustrated in Figure 1, a given test piece was flexed at
a fixed rate of 100 cycles/min. under a fixed load, W (a load per unit cross-sectional
area: 4 kg/mm2), with the pulley diameter varied for adjusting the surface strain (λ) of the test
piece, to obtain an S-N curve (on a graph wherein the vertical axis was the scale
of surface strain (λ) and the horizontal axis was the scale of number of cycles, N)
as illustrated in Figure 2. The particular surface strain of the test piece at which
the S-N curve described a level line was reported as the fatigue limit (λe) of this
test piece. In general, the preferred fatigue limit value (Xe) is 0.0025 or more in
the case of ribbons, more preferably 0.0035 or more, or 0.7 or more in the case of
wires, more preferably 0.8 or more. The surface strain (λ) of the test piece was calculated
in accordance with the following formula:

(wherein t stands for the thickness of the test piece (diameter in the case of a wire)
and r for the radius of the pulley).
[0020] In the diagram, 1 stands for the load required for exerting a fixed load per unit
cross-sectional area (mm
2) (4 kg/mm
2) upon the test piece, 2 for the pulley used for adjusting the surface strain of the
test piece, 3 for the test piece, 4 for the slider for horizontal movement, and 5
for the circular rotary plate.
[0021] (2) Fatigue ratio (fe): The fatigue ratio (fe) of a given test piece was determined
in accordance with the following formula.

[0022] The tensile strength at fracture and the Young's modulus of the test piece were obtained
in accordance with the S-S curve obtained on an Instron type tensile tester under
the conditions 2.0 cm of test piece size and 4.17 x 10
-4/sec. of strain speed.
[0023] Further in the examples, the amorphous texture forming ability of a given alloy composition
was determined by jetting the alloy composition in a molten state through a spinning
nozzle 0.50 mm in orifice diameter onto the surface of'a rotary roll of copper 20
cm in diameter, allowing the jet of fused alloy composition to be suddenly cooled
and solidified to produce a ribbon of continuously changing thickness (by stopping
the rotary roll during the issue of the fused alloy composition), testing the produced
ribbon for its texture with an optical microscope and an X-ray diffraction meter,
and finding the particular thickness of the ribbon at which crystals were first detected
in the texture, i.e., the critical thickness (µm) for the formation of amorphous phase.
In general, the preferred thickness is 80 µm or more, more preferably 100 µm or more,
most preferably 150 µm or more.
EXAMPLES 1-7 AND COMPARATIVE EXPERIMENTS 1-5
[0024] An alloy of a varying composition shown in Table 1 was fused under a blanket of argon.
Under an argon gas pressure of 1.5 kg/cm
2, the resultant fused alloy composition was spouted through a spinning nozzle 0.20
mm in orifice diameter onto the surface of a steel roll 20 cm in diameter kept in
rotation (one-roll method) and was allowed to cool and solidify suddenly and produce
a ribbon of amorphous texture 40 µm in thickness (about 2 mm in width).
[0025] The ribbon of amorphous texture thus obtained was tested for tensile strength at
fracture and fatigue property in an atmosphere maintained at 20°C and 65% RH. The
results were as shown in Table 1.

[0026] In Run No. 1, since the alloy composition had no Cr content, the produced ribbon
showed poor fatigue property despite its excellent amorphous texture forming property.
In Run No. 5, although the alloy composition incorporated 5 atom% of Cr alone in addition
to the alloy composition of Run No. 1, the produced ribbon showed very little improvement
in fatigue property and exhibited very poor amorphous texture forming ability, indicating
that the addition of Cr failed to bring about the expected effect. In Run No. 9, the
alloy composition similarly incorporated 10 atom% of Cr alone and the produced ribbon
showed some improvement in fatigue property. However, its amorphous texture forming
ability was extremely impaired. (Note that the alloy compositions used in Run Nos.
1, 5 and 9 are those indicated in U.S. Serial No. 254,714, EPC Disclosure 39169.)
In Run Nos. 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 10 and 11, the alloy compositions incorporated Cr and P
or C in amounts falling in the specified ranges in addition to the Fe-Si-B type alloy
as contemplated by the present invention and the produced ribbons, therefore, were
found to excel in amorphous texture forming ability and in fatigue property as well.
In Run No. ll, although the alloy composition incorporated 14 atom% of Cr and, therefore,
had a higher Cr content than the alloy composition of Run No. 10, the produced ribbon
showed rather inferior amorphous texture forming ability and fatigue property than
the ribbon of Run No. 10. In Run No. 8, the produced ribbon showed no discernible
improvement in amorphous texture forming ability and fatigue property because the
alloy composition incorporated P and C in a larger combined amount of 12 atom% than
is allowed. In Run No. 12, the alloy had the same composition as the alloy of Example
11 of Japanese Patent Application (OPI) No. 4017/76. Since this alloy composition
had a larger P content of 13 atom% and a smaller B content.of 1 atom% than are required,
the produced ribbon, though slightly improved in fatigue property, suffered from very
poor amorphous texture forming ability and lacked feasibility.
EXAMPLES 8-10 AND COMPARATIVE EXPERIMENTS 6-12
[0027] An alloy of a varying composition shown in Table 2 was fused under a blanket of argon.
Under an argon gas pressure, the resultant fused alloy composition was spouted through
a spinning nozzle of.ruby 0.105 mm in orifice diameter into a whirling layer of liquid
coolant 2.5 cm in dpeth and 4°C in temperature formed on the inner wall of a cylindrical
drum 500 mm in inside diameter rotated at 350 rpm, to be suddenly cooled and solidified
therein. Consequently, there was obtained a uniform continuous wire having a circular
cross section 0.100 mm in average diameter. During the production of the wire, the
tip of the spinning nozzle was kept at a distance of 1 mm from the surface of the
whirling layer of liquid coolant and the angle of contact between the flow of fused
alloy composition spouted through the spinning nozzle and the surface of the whirling
layer of liquid coolant was kept at 75°. The speed at which the fused alloy composition
was spouted through the spinning nozzle was measured on the basis of the weight of
fused composition spouted into the ambient air and collected in the air for a fixed
length of-time- During this measurement, the argon gas pressure was adjusted so that
the fused composition would be spouted at a rate of about 500 m/minute.
[0028] The wire of amorphous texture thus produced was tested for tensile strength at fracture
and fatigue property in an atmosphere maintained under the conditions of 20°C and
65% RH. The results were as shown in Table 2.
[0029] For the purpose of comparison, a commercially available piano wire (0.100 mm in diameter,
material code SWRS 82A, and piano wire code SWPA) was similarly tested. The results
were indicated in the bracket of Comparative Experiment 12 in Table 2.

[0030] In Run No. 13, the produced wire showed fair fatigue property and poor tensile strength
at fracture and the alloy composition was expensive and, hence, the product was deficient
in feasibility. In Run No. 14, although the wire showed slightly better fatigue property
than the Fe-based alloys of Run Nos. 15 and 16, it was deficient in tensile strength
at fracture and fatigue property, but produced for the same cost as the alloy composition
of Run No. 13. The alloy compositions used in Run Nos. 16, 17, 18, 19, 20 and 21 were
the same as the alloy compositions of Run Nos. 1, 4, 5, 7, 10 and 12, respectively.
The alloy composition of Run No. 16 which incorporated no Cr and the alloy composition
of Run No. 18 which incorporated 5 atom% of Cr alone (equalling the alloy compositions
indicated in U.S. Serial No. 254,714 and EPC Disclosure 39169) gave wires of poor
fatigue property. The alloy compositions of Run Nos. 17, 19 and 20 incorporated
-Cr and P and/or C in amounts falling within the ranges contemplated by the.present
invention gave excellent fatigue property due to the addition of these elements. It
is surprising to note that although entirely the same alloy compositions were used
in the pairs of Run Nos. 1 and 16, Run Nos. 4 and 17, Run Nos. 5 and 18, Run Nos.
7 and 19, and Run Nos. 10 and 20, the wires of amorphous texture having a circular
cross section by the spinning-in-rotary-liquid method in Run Nos. 16, 17, 18, 19 and
20 showed notably higher fatigue property than the ribbons of amorphous texture produced
by the one-roll method in Run Nos. 1, 4, 5, 7 and 10. In Run No. 21, although the
alloy composition was identical with the alloy composition of Run No. 12 (the alloy
composition indicated in Example 11 of Japanese Patent Application (OPI) No. 4016/76),
since it was deficient in amorphous texture forming ability, the wire 0.100 mm in
diameter produced by the spinning-in-rotary-liquid method failed to acquire amorphous
texture and instead assumed a crystalline texture. Thus, the wire was too brittle
to withstand the test conditions of tensile strength at fracture and fatigue property.
EXAMPLES 11-14 AND COMPARATIVE EXPERIMENTS 13-16
[0031] An alloy of a varying composition, Fe
70-xCr
5M
xSi
9B
14C
2 (wherein M stands for Ta, Nb, W or Mo) was treated by the procedure of Example 1
using the one-roll method to produce a ribbon 50 µm in thickness (about 2 mm in width).
The produced ribbon was tested for tensile strength at fracture, fatigue limit, temperature
of crystallization, 180° intimate bending property, and amorphous texture forming
ability. The results were as shown in Table 3.

[0032] In Run Nos. 23, 25, 27 and 29, the alloy compositions conformed to the specification
of the present invention. Compared with the ribbon obtained in Run No. 6 (Example
4; ribbon of amorphous texture of
Fe70Cr
5si
9B
l4C
2 having 532°C of crystallization temperature), the ribbons produced from the aforementioned
alloy compositions showed nearly equivalent degrees of fatigue limit and the degrees
of tensile strength at fracture improved by 7 to 27 kg/mm2, and the degrees of crystallization
temperature improved by 15 to 27°C, indicating that the incorporation of Ta, Nb, W
and Mo was effective for such improvement. In Run Nos. 24, 26, 28 and 30, however,
since the alloy compositions incorporated such elements excessively, the produced
ribbons showed inferior amorphous texture forming ability and too low toughness to
withstand the test conditions of 180° intimate bending property and they also were
deficient in fatigue property.
[0033] While the invention has been described in detail and with reference to specific embodiments
thereof, it will be apparent to one skilled in the art that various changes and modifications
can be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope thereof.
1. An amorphous iron-based alloy excelling in amorphous texture forming ability and
fatigue property, comprising:
25 atom% or less of Si;
2.5 to 25 atom% of B;
1.5 to 20 atom% of Cr;
0.2 to 10 atom% of at least one element selected from the group consisting of P and
C; and
the balance to make up 100 atom% substantially of Fe, providing that the sum of Si
and B falls in the range of 15 to 35 atom%.
2. An amorphous alloy as claimed in Claim 1, wherein the Si content does not exceed
17.5 atom%, the B content falls in the range of 5 to 22.5 atom%, and the sum of the
Si and B contents falls in the range of 17.5 to 32.5 atom%.
3. An amorphous alloy as claimed in Claim 2, wherein the Cr content falls in the range
of 3 to 10 atom% and the P or C content falls in the range of 0.5 to 5 atom%.
4. An amorphous alloy as claimed in Claim 2, wherein the Cr content falls in the range
of 3 to 10 atom% and the sum of the P and C contents falls in the range of 1 to 8
atom%.
5. A thin wire comprised of an amorphous iron-based alloy excelling in amorphous texture
forming ability and fatigue property, comprising:
25 atom% or less of Si;
2.5 to 25 atom% of B;
1.5 to 20 atom% of Cr;
0.2 to 10 atom% of at least one element selected from the group consisting of P and
C; and
the balance to make up 100 atom% substantially of Fe, providing the sum of Si and
B falls in the range of 15 to 35 atom%.
6. A thin wire comprised of an amorphous alloy as claimed in Claim 5, wherein the
Si content is 17.5 atom% or less, the B content falls in the range of 5 to 22.5 atom%,
the sum of Si and B contents falls in the range of 17.5 to 32.5 atom%.
7. A thin wire comprised of an amorphous alloy as claimed in Claim 5, wherein the
Cr content falls in the range of 3 to 10 atom% and the P. or C content falls in the
range of 0.5 to 5 atom%.
8. A thin wire comprised of an amorphous alloy as claimed in Claim 5, wherein the
Cr content falls in the range of 3 to 10 atom% and the sum of P and C contents falls
in the range of 1 to 8 atom%.
9. An amorphous iron-based alloy excelling in amorphous texture forming ability and
fatigue property, comprising:
25 atom% or less of Si;
2.5 to 25 atom% of B, providing that the sum of Si and B falls in the range of 15
to 35 atom%;
1.5 to 20 atom% of Cr;
0.2 to 10 atom% of at least one element selected from the group consisting of P and
C;
30 atom% or less of at least one element selected from the group consisting of Co,
Ni, Ta, Nb, Mo, W, V, Mn, Ti, Aℓ, Cu and Zr; and
the balance to make up 100 atom% substantially of Fe, providing that the maximum of
Co content is 30 atom% and that of Ni content 20 atom%, and the maximum of Ta and
Nb contents are 10 atom% each, those of Mo, W, V and Mn contents 5 atom% each, and
those of Ti, A£, Cu and Zr 2.5 atom% each.
10. An amorphous alloy as claimed in Claim 9, wherein the Si content is not more than
17.5 atom%, the B content falls in the range of 5 to 22.5 atom%, and the sum of the
Si and B contents falls in the range of 17.5 to 32.5 atom%.
ll. An amorphous alloy as claimed in Claim 9, wherein the Cr content falls in the
range of 3 to 10 atom% and the P or C content falls in the range of 0.5 to 5 atom%.
12. An amorphous alloy as claimed in Claim 9, wherein the Cr content falls in the
range of 3 to 10 atom% and the sum of the P and C contents falls in the range of 1
to 8 atom%.
13. A thin wire comprised of an amorphous iron-based alloy excelling in amorphous
texture forming ability and fatigue property, comprising:
25 atom% or less of Si;
2.5 to 25 atom% of B, providing that the sum of Si and B falls in the range of 15
to 35 atom%;
1.5 to 20 atom% of Cr;
0.2 to 10 atom% of at least one element selected from the group consisting of P and
C;
30 atom% or less of at least one element selected from the group consisting of Co,
Ni, Ta, Nb, Mo, W, V, Mn, Ti, Ai, Cu and Zr; and
the balance to make up 100 atom% substantially of Fe, providing that the maximum of
Co content is 30 atom% and that of Ni content 20 atom% and the maximum of Ta and Nb
contents are 10 atom% each, those of Mo, W, V and Mn contents 5 atom% each, and those
of Ti, Aℓ, Cu and Zr 2.5 atom% each.
14. A thin wire comprised of an amorphous alloy as claimed in Claim 13, wherein the
Si content is 17.5 atom% or less, the B content falls in the range of 5 to 22.5 atom%,
and the sum of Si and B contents falls in the range of 17.5 to 32.5 atom%.
15. A thin wire comprised of an amorphous alloy as claimed in Claim 13, wherein the
Cr content falls in the range of 3 to 10 atom% and the P or C content falls in the
range of 0.5 to 5 atom%.
16. A thin wire comprised of an amorphous alloy as claimed in Claim 13, wherein the
Cr content falls in the range of 3 to 10 atom% and the sum of P and C contents falls
in the range of 1 to 8 atom%.